Council Adopts Oceanic Whitetip Shark Protections for Hawai'i and American Samoa Longline Fisheries

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Council Adopts Oceanic Whitetip Shark Protections for Hawai‘i and American Samoa Longline Fisheries To improve the post-hooking survivorship of oceanic whitetip sharks, the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council voted in June 2021 to prohibit wire leaders in the Hawai‘i deep-set longline fishery and require removal of trailing gear for all longline vessels operating under the Pacific Pelagic Fishery Ecosystem Plan. Available scientific information supports the fishing gear change from steel wire to monofilament nylon leaders to facilitate a shark’s ability to free itself from an accidental hooking by biting through the line. A new risk analysis from the Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center (PIFSC) presented at the June meeting found that a longline fishery gear change by the Hawai‘i deep-set fleet from wire to monofilament leaders would reduce the catch and mortality of oceanic whitetip sharks by approximately 30%. This conservation effort was initially developed by the Hawaii Longline Association (HLA) as a voluntary transition presented at the Council’s December 2020 meeting. Since wire leaders are used as a safety measure to prevent fly-back of the weighted swivel, HLA is developing a training program for crew on shark handling and safety protocols. The Council emphasized the importance of balancing crew safety with the requirement to remove trailing gear, and recommended that fishermen target removing trailing gear down to less than 1 meter (about 3 feet), only if it is safe to do so. The Western Pacific Region has two other active longline fisheries—the Hawai‘i shallow-set and the American Samoa longline fisheries—both of which already use nylon leaders. For this reason, the Council’s action focused on prohibiting wire leaders in the Hawai‘i deep-set longline fishery, but the trailing gear requirement applies across the board. In making its final decision, the Council received public comments requesting consideration of additional measures to protect oceanic whitetip sharks. One of those is a measure that would remove the shallowest hooks within each section of the longline fishing gear. Analysis of available observer data showed that oceanic whitetip sharks are typically caught more frequently on hooks that are placed closer to the surface. Each longline gear section between two floats has 25–30 hooks. A removal of the three shallowest hooks could either mean that fishermen would have six fewer hooks in each section, or that they would make each section between two floats longer to keep the hooks away from the shallowest portion of the catenary curve. Either option could mean significant impacts to the fishery’s operation and revenue. PIFSC’s risk analysis showed that the impacts of a measure to remove the shallowest hook in the Hawai‘i deep-set longline fishery could be as much as $11-13 million per year. 0 50

Oceanic whitetip shark. Photo: Mark Royer.

This measure would also be difficult to regulate and enforce, and data are lacking on whether removing hooks would contribute to reduce oceanic whitetip shark catches, or if those catches would simply shift to other hooks. For these reasons, the Council did not adopt this measure. Oceanic whitetip sharks are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act and are subject to overfishing and are overfished in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean (WCPO), primarily due to foreign fishing. U.S. longline impacts on oceanic whitetip sharks are only about 6% of the catch in the WCPO. Recognizing the low impact on the stock and the importance of leveling the playing field for U.S. fisheries, the Council previously recommended that wire leader usage also be reduced in international longline fisheries. According to a recent study, the WCPO oceanic whitetip shark stock is projected to rebound if catch at the international level are reduced by just 10%.

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Pacific Islands Fishery News | SUMMER 2021

Branchline Hook

A catenary curve is the shape that an idealized hanging chain or cable assumes under its own weight when supported only at its ends. This image shows the distribution of hooks based on catenary geometry from a typical set used in the Hawai‘i longline fishery that deploys from 25-30 hooks between floats.



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